In my opinion, from 1871 until 1990 Germany fought
for their own identity. Up until this time, their identity was being constantly
dictated, controlled, or lost because of the ways of other countries. There are
some scattered parts of history where Germany did have their own identity in
some capacity; some of these parts include World War I, the Weimar Republic,
the Third Reich, and the Second World War. Although they had some sort of
identity during these times, they were still struggling to find a complete
identity, something was always missing. I believe that on May 8th 1945,
Germany hit rock bottom, which helped push them find their own identity, and
more importantly, help them come to where they are today.

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Here you can see how much land Germany lost. |
The German spirit was crushed. Hagen Schultz wrote, “Equally serious was the amount of moral destruction wrought by the violent dictatorship, the war, and a full knowledge of the horrors of the mass murders committed in the extermination camps, which were inky now penetrating Germans’ collective awareness in unfiltered form”(Schultz, 287).Once the treaty was written, Germany was divided into four parts. From 1945-1949, there was no Germany.
There were only sectors: American, French, Britain, and Soviet Union. Then in 1949 the UN came and said that
Western Germany could come together and for the Bundesrepublik Deutschland, while East Germany was going to be
called Deutsche
Demokratische Republik. Germany was once again a nation. Unfortunately, a
nation divided into two separate parts, with hardly any similarities between
the two halves. It was divided between
democracy and communism. Then the Deutsche Demokratische Republik took
it to a new extreme. They built a wall, stripped people of their basic rights,
and even tried blockading Berlin, which was also divided just like Germany. The
United Nations were not going to allow this and a massive Airlift took place to
get supplies to the people in Berlin.
The wall was built in 1961 to stop
Eastern German people from trying to flee to the West. It was for the most part
successful, but people knew they were still being oppressed. An increasing urge
to become one nation again was building. On November 9th, 1989 East
and West Germany citizens rose up against the wall and the oppression. People
were out standing on the wall, helping others over. No one was getting shot.
Everyone wanted to be one nation again.
In this picture you can see that
amazing, inspirational night. No longer could Germany be divided.All of this reflects how far Germany had
to come to obtain where they are today. The signing of the treaty in Reims was
the beginning of solidifying German identity. It took a while; mistakes were
made in the process. In the end though, a successful, democratic nation emerged
from the ruins of World War II. It leads to the question of what if? What if
Germany was never divided? Would they still be trying to find their place in
this world? What would their government system be? There are so many uncertainties,
but none of it matters anymore! After hundreds of years, Germany is finally a
nation and is doing fantastic against all odds. To me, them signing the treaty
in Reims was them hitting rock bottom. And as Thomas Wayne would say, “Why do
we fall down? So we can learn to pick ourselves up ”.
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